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Thirty-plus years of defending such cases has taught us eight things to look for in employment law cases. A seasoned and successful plaintiff’s attorney, “Mike K,” spoke at a seminar recently about how he selected winning cases. Mike said it all comes down to one word, “fairness.” Mike was succinct and right. No matter how you instruct a jury, jurors will usually look for a way to do what they think is fair. What is fair in some parts of the United States, however, may seem horribly unfair in other parts of the country. Thus, it clearly pays to understand the law of the particular state where the company operates and the predilections of its juries. 

Even though a jury should only decide cases based on whether the employer was legally within its rights to discharge the plaintiff, jurors often see their mission as deciding whether the employer acted fairly, especially in relation to its other employees and the nature of its business. The fair employer usually wins the lawsuit; the unfair employer loses. 

Here are the 8 questions that an HR professional or employment lawyer should ask to see if the discharge action is fair.

1. How Long Has the Employee Been Working Here And Is This Their First Discipline Issue? 

A jury will view an employee that has been with a company for 20 years differently than it will view an employee that has been with a company for 20 months or 20 days. The longer the employee has worked for an employer, the greater the jury’s expectations that the employee deserves a warning first and an opportunity to correct their behavior, unless the employee’s conduct was so egregious that discharge is a “fair” outcome. 

Arbitrators regularly use this same line of thinking and you can expect jurors to do the same. Arbitrator Dennis R. Nolan put it well:

Even long seniority counts for only so much. It buys extra consideration, it merits the benefit of any reasonable doubts, and it will oblige an employer to view the employee’s record as a whole rather than treating events in isolation. Nevertheless, even senior employees have to come to work regularly.

Arbitrator Dennis R. Nolan in Carolina Tel. & Tel. Co., 97 LA 653, 655 (1991). In fact, many arbitrators have turned discharges into suspensions when they judged a discharge of an employee with a 10 to 20 year work record and no prior disciplines. 

In deciding if discharge is the fair discipline, you will want to know how long the employee has been working for the company and if past discipline issues exist. 

2. Have There Been Any Past Warnings? 

This is the corollary to question 1. As noted, unless an employee’s conduct is an egregious misdeed, jurors believe an employee deserves some warning and an opportunity to correct or improve before someone’s employment is terminated. Jurors believe in the principle of progressive discipline, especially for minor infractions and will look for an unlawful motive if the employer discharges instead of giving at least one warning for a minor infraction. 

Supervisors may claim to have given prior warnings, but make sure you look at the employee’s disciplinary history. Look through any and all past warnings (verbal and/or written) and also check to see whether the employee was told, in writing or orally, that one more misdeed could result in discharge. 

3. Review Any Documentation Regarding the Incident Giving Rise To the Discharge. 

When a supervisor or manager is fed up enough to call for an employee’s discharge, emotions may be running high. Before you order up the employee’s final paycheck, ask to see any documentation of the incident that led to discharge discipline. Examine the documentation for improper motives or unfairness and make sure your company is doing the fair thing by approving this discharge. 

Documents which contain statements that show an unlawful motive for the discharge are embarrassing and costly. We are not suggesting that the HR Manager destroy such documents. Rather, finding such evidence gives the employer an opportunity to prevent an unlawful discharge. It is also an opportunity to train the supervisor or manager about their obligations under the law, as well as the company’s expectations of its management team. 

4. Has Anyone Else Done This Before And Were They Treated Differently? 

The law calls them “comparators”. These are people who engaged in the same conduct and were treated the same or differently. Courts and juries will pay attention to what the employer did in past similar situations. Understand that differentiating or mitigating circumstances can be used to distinguish either the conduct at issue or the employer’s differing treatment of these individuals. 

While it may be a plaintiff’s burden to prove that there is a comparator of sufficient similarity who was treated better, Smith v. Allen Health Sys., Inc., 302 F.3d 827, 835 (8th Cir. 2002), it is best to examine these scenarios yourself and determine if there are comparators. 

If you find yourself saying “but two wrongs don’t make a right”, then examine what distinguishes this situation from the last one, such as different supervision, a change in law or the passage of time. See, for example, Mitchell v. Toledo Hospital, 964 F.2d 577 (6th Cir. 1992); General Ins. Co. of Am. v. EEOC, 491 F.2d 133, 136 (9th Cir. 1974) (incident involving alleged comparator from eight years earlier was too remote to be relevant); Plair v. E.J. Branch & Sons, Inc., 931 F.Supp. 555, 565 (N.D. Ill. 1995) (a plaintiff cannot show that she was similarly situated with another individual when a different decision-maker was involved);Bassano v. Hellman Worldwide Logistics, Inc., 310 F.Supp. 2d 1270, 1280 (N.D. Ga. 2003) (new management may see things differently, and choose to enforce policies more strictly, than previous management); Rogas v. Florida, 285 F.3d 1339, 1343 (11th Cir. 2002);Chapman v. Al Transp., 229 F.3d 1012, 1031 n. 21 (11th Cir. 2000). 

5. Were There Any Witnesses? 

If there are witnesses, someone should ask them what they saw or heard. Consider asking them to write out a short statement of what they witnessed. If a company terminates an employee without listening to what witnesses have to say, the jury will second-guess an employer’s good faith belief that there was misconduct to support a discharge. An investigation need not always be exhaustive, but if no one interviews actual witnesses, the jury will wonder if the company’s decision was in fact unlawfully motivated. 

6. Was the Person a Member of a Protected Class? 

What is the person’s race, gender, age, national origin or disability status? All of these categories can lead to a prima facie claim of unlawful discrimination. In addition to protected classes under Civil Rights laws, do not forget to ask about potential whistleblower or retaliatory discharge issues: Did the employee recently file any worker compensation claims? Did the person recently make safety complaints or threaten to bring in a union? If the employee being discharged enjoys a protected class status or was engaged in a legally protected activity, go back to question 4 about “comparators.” How have others, whether in a protected class or not, been treated when they engaged in similar conduct? 

Ralph Waldo Emerson may have viewed “consistency as the hobgoblin of little minds”, but when it comes to fairness, consistency towards similarly-situated employees is the best defense to an employment law claim. In fact, it can be such a strong defense it will warrant summary judgment in favor of an employer. See Warren v. Solo Cup Co., 516 F.3d 627 (7th Cir. Ill. 2008) (finding that summary judgment was properly granted to employer on Equal Pay Act claim because alleged comparative employee was not similarly situated given the differences in the employees’ education, experience and computer aptitude); Riggs v. Airtran Airways, Inc., 497 F.3d 1108 (10th Cir. 2007) (holding that grant of summary judgment on former employee’s ADEA claim was proper because other employees were not similarly situated); Floyd v. Fed. Express Corp., 423 Fed. Appx. 924, 930 (11th Cir. 2011) (upholding a grant of summary judgment because the plaintiff failed to establish that his co-worker was similarly situated to himself). 

7. Will Co-Workers Believe the Company Was Fair? 

Besides a potential jury, the other persons judging your disciplinary decision-making are the company’s employees. Employees, like juries, expect their employer to be fair. If your company is sued by a discharged employee, from a defense standpoint, nothing beats having co-workers willing to testify on behalf of the company because the employer acted fairly. In fact, those employees will likely be the same ones who tell their discharged co-worker to move on with his life. Nothing is worse, however, than having the majority of the employees telling the discharged employee to sue the company and offering to give sworn statements to the plaintiff’s lawyer. 

8. What Do You Plan To Tell the Employee Who Will Be Discharged? 

Planning the termination meeting is an important step in preventing future liability. The employer should conduct the termination in person, if possible. The termination meeting should be conducted consistently within the company’s policies, procedures and practices. During the termination meeting ensure that there is at least one other company person present—the speaker and the observer. Even if the employment relationship is “at will”, the employer is wise to explain the reason for the termination. Employees who are not given a reason for their termination are more likely to pursue legal action against their former employers than employees who are told the reason. 

Employers should still be cautious when delivering the reasons for termination because juries will expect that the reasons the employer gives now will be the only reasons the employer should be able to use to defend the decision during a trial. The employer can provide a generalized list of the reasons rather than detailing specifics so long as the reason is given. Statements like “we are moving in a different direction” cause plaintiff lawyers to look for unlawful motives. 

The employer should consider giving the employee an opportunity to tell his or her side of the story. The employee may say they understand or offer to resign. If what they say raises new issues you were not aware of, the employer has the option of suspending the employee while the employer investigates the validity of such claims. 

While conducting the termination, the employer should avoid being hostile or emotional and avoid careless and/or discriminatory statements. Discharge cases for legitimate business reasons have been lost over words like “we need someone with more energy”. Rather, the employer should refer to its business reason such as low sales numbers or poor production for the last couple of years. If the reason for discharge is a violation of policies or procedures, refer to the violation and, if appropriate, point to any past warnings regarding these issues. 

As you plan the termination meeting, consider consulting an objective, impartial person for advice. Whether that is a fellow human resources person in your company or an employment law attorney, it is useful to solicit the opinion of someone who is not integrally involved in the decision to terminate the employee. Documenting that conversation may also be useful in establishing that you were trying to be fair in the decision to discharge.

http://www.dinsmore.com/adverse_employment_action_steps/

[Source: Reprinted with the authors' permission: Ashley Pack and Katherine Brings are attorneys in Dinsmore’s Charleston office focusing their practice on labor and employment issues.  Learn more about Ashley and Katie at www.dinsmore.com. This article should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion on any specific facts or situations. For further information on your own situation, we encourage you to contact the author of the article or any other member of the firm. Copyright 2012 Dinsmore & Shohl LLP. All rights reserved.]